Commonwealth Mechanical Contractors, Inc. v. Standard Federal Savings & Loan

281 S.E.2d 811, 222 Va. 330, 1981 Va. LEXIS 309
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 11, 1981
DocketRecord 800374
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 281 S.E.2d 811 (Commonwealth Mechanical Contractors, Inc. v. Standard Federal Savings & Loan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth Mechanical Contractors, Inc. v. Standard Federal Savings & Loan, 281 S.E.2d 811, 222 Va. 330, 1981 Va. LEXIS 309 (Va. 1981).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Commonwealth Mechanical Contractors, Inc., and Fairfax Sheet Metal, Heating and Air Conditioning, Inc., (appellants) timely filed memoranda of mechanics’ liens against Lakeland Enterprises, Inc., (Lakeland) in January of 1977. Lakeland subsequently defaulted on its construction loan, and Standard Federal Savings and Loan Association (Standard Federal) became the owner of record of the real estate subject to appellants’ mechanics’ liens. Appellants filed bills of complaint to enforce their mechanics’ liens in May and June 1977, but both failed to name Standard Federal as a party defendant. The trial court granted appellants leave to amend the bills of complaint to include Standard Federal as a defendant. Standard Federal demurred to the amended bills of complaint on the ground that suit was not brought against it within six months “from the time when the memorandum of lien was recorded.” Code § 43-17. The trial court properly sustained these demurrers. See Neff v. Garrard, 216 Va. 496, 498, 219 S.E.2d 878, 879-80 (1975).

Fairfax Lumber and Millwork Company, Inc., (Fairfax Lumber) also filed a memorandum of a mechanics’ lien in January 1977. It filed a bill of complaint to enforce the lien in June 1977. Named as defendants in the suit were Lakeland, Standard Federal and fifteen other holders of mechanics’ liens against the property. Appellants were included among the defendants named in this suit. The bill of complaint averred that at least thirty-five mechanics’ liens had been filed against the property, and a schedule giving the specifics of the liens was attached to the bill.

In June 1979, over two years after the filing of their memoranda of mechanics’ liens, appellants sought to enforce their *332 mechanics’ liens by filing intervening petitions in the pending suit brought by Fairfax Lumber. Appellees 1 demurred to the petitions, contending that enforcement of appellants’ mechanics’ liens was barred because the intervening petitions were not filed within the limitation period set out in Code § 43-17. The' trial court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the intervening petitions. In this appeal, we determine if the trial court properly sustained the demurrers to appellants’ intervening petitions.

Code § 43-22 2 allows a lienor to seek enforcement of his lien in a second lienor’s suit to enforce a mechanics’ lien against the same property. Code § 43-17 provides that “[n]o suit to enforce any lien perfected under §§ 43-4, 43-5 and 43-7 to 43-10” shall be brought except within a specified time period and that “the filing of a petition to enforce any such lien in any suit wherein such petition may be properly filed shall be regarded as the institution of a suit under this section.” The text of these portions of Code §§ 43-17 and 43-22 has remained virtually unchanged since their simultaneous enactment by the General Assembly, Acts, 1893-94, c. 535 at 576. This common history dictates that each provision be interpreted in light of the other. When read together, it is clear that these code sections require that a lienor’s intervening petition in a suit to enforce a mechanics’ lien be filed within the limitation period provided in Code § 43-17. Although the filing of an intervening petition in a suit filed by another lienor is the equivalent of instituting a suit under Code § 43-17, being named a party defendant in a suit by a lienor is not. It is important for the owner, the builder, and the lender to know at an early date the extent to which the property involved in encumbered. Merely naming a lienor in a suit is not enough to provide this information because it does not establish the validity of the lien or the amount due thereunder. The limitation period set out in Code § 43-17 ensures that the three principals named above will know the lienors who seek to enforce mechanics’ liens recorded against the property and the *333 amount claimed to be due not later than “six months from the time when the memorandum of lien was recorded or . . . sixty days from the time the building, structure or railroad was completed or the work thereon otherwise terminated.”

We reject the appellants’ contention that Spiller v. Wells, 96 Va. 598, 32 S.E. 46 (1899), is controlling and mandates reversal of the circuit court’s judgment. In Spiller, the primary issue was a jurisdictional dispute between two courts of concurrent jurisdiction concerning suits filed in each court to enforce mechanics’ liens upon the same property. Barnard & Co., a subcontractor of Wells, filed suit in a circuit court to enforce the mechanics’ lien against property owned by Spiller. Later, but within the statutory period, Wells filed a separate suit in a court of law and chancery to enforce his mechanics’ lien against Spiller. Barnard filed a petition in Wells’ suit, asking the court to dismiss or stay Wells’ suit until disposition of Barnard’s suit. The court of law and chancery dismissed Barnard’s petition. Reversing the court of law and chancery, we held that the court first acquiring jurisdiction over the subject matter should decide all questions flowing out of the controversy. In the course of the opinion, we concluded that Barnard’s suit, which named Wells as a party defendant, tolled the statute of limitations for Wells and other subcontractors claiming under him. 3 Id. at 602, 32 S.E. at 48. While this portion of Spiller might be interpeted to hold that a lienor’s being named a party defendant tolls the time period within which a suit must be filed even though the lienor has not filed a petition to enforce his lien, we confine the Spiller holding to cases involving liens filed by a general contractor and his subcontractors. In the instant case, we are concerned only with the liens filed by general contractors.

Richmond Eng. Corp. v. Loth, 135 Va. 110, 157-59, 115 S.E. 774, 788 (1923), and Francis, et als. v. Hotel Rueger, 125 Va. 106, 99 S.E. 690 (1919), are likewise inapposite. In both cases, the lienors seeking to enforce their mechanics’ liens in suits filed by other parties had neither filed intervening petitions nor become parties to the second lienor’s action prior to the expiration of their *334 liens. Despite certain language found in these opinions, 4 we conclude that neither case stands for the proposition that a lienor, who is named as a party in a second lienor’s suit to enforce a mechanics’ lien, may seek to enforce his own lien in that suit if he has failed to file a petition seeking enforcement of his lien within the time period prescribed by Code § 43-17.

For the reasons stated, we will affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

Affirmed.

1

Commonwealth Investment Mortgage Co., James N. and Helen J. Dean, Thane S. and Frances R. Lohr, James A. and Pamela A. Brown, and Cherie V. Hamden.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 S.E.2d 811, 222 Va. 330, 1981 Va. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-mechanical-contractors-inc-v-standard-federal-savings-va-1981.